Shantara
Well-Known Member
Did anyone else see this?
Not sure how I feel about it really.
Not sure how I feel about it really.
Didn't watch it but since when was it up to the BHS to determined new bridleways? Thought footpaths, bridleways etc were organised/overseen by county councils?
As for the BHS and TROT - the BHS will not go there.
The BHS weren't trying to determine new bridleways, they were trying to resurrect old ones.
Still, the BHS has no legal right to go around and label where riders used to be allowed to ride though, it's a council issue. Not surprised landowners are getting snarky if they've just slapped with a poster on a gate.
I agree with the poster on a gate issue - it's not good communication is it really? However if there was a bridleway there previously you have to ask why isn't it still there? Probably because farmers in the past blocked it up/grew crops over it and back then, nobody queried or enforced anything.
The farmer asked " Dont you have enough places to ride your horses?" Well no we dont.
But that isn't his problem. It should be a consideration when buying a horse, where will I ride it? I think most farmers tolerate the public access that is already on their land and I fully understand, as a tenant farmer, their reluctance to allow more access routes on their land. Farming is a business and a footpath, bridleway does have an impact on how you can use your land.
On OS maps paths are often shown but are also misread as public paths/bridleways. It may be an 'old footpath/bridleway' but it doesn't always mean it was a 'public' one, as defined by the council.
But that isn't his problem. It should be a consideration when buying a horse, where will I ride it? I think most farmers tolerate the public access that is already on their land and I fully understand, as a tenant farmer, their reluctance to allow more access routes on their land. Farming is a business and a footpath, bridleway does have an impact on how you can use your land.
On OS maps paths are often shown but are also misread as public paths/bridleways. It may be an 'old footpath/bridleway' but it doesn't always mean it was a 'public' one, as defined by the council.
But surely that is the farmers problem, if we should check where we should ride surely before buy a farm or land he should have checked rights of way.
Still, the BHS has no legal right to go around and label where riders used to be allowed to ride though, it's a council issue. Not surprised landowners are getting snarky if they've just slapped with a poster on a gate.
The route in question was not a footpath it is an old bridleway and surely once a bridleway always a bridleway. I can really understand the farmers frustration but why should it not be used as a bridleway just because he objects. To be honest we don't know the full story from either side, but if its marked out on map which it clearly is he has no leg to stand on.A 'right of way' is not necessarily a public right of way, the farm may have been in his family for generations with old bridleways, footpaths being used in the past for farmworkers but being out use for many many years this does not make them public footpaths.